Two NYPD cops accused of punishing a Staten Island teen by dumping him in a swamp without his shoes or shirt will have to dip into their pockets to help settle a federal lawsuit, the Daily News has learned.

Officers Richard Danese and Thomas Elliassen will each kick in $5,000 on top of the $140,000 the city agreed to pay to plaintiff Rayshawn Moreno, according to papers filed in Brooklyn Federal Court.

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Moreno was 14 years old in 2007 when the officers caught him tossing eggs at cars on Halloween. They decided to teach him a lesson in street justice. They drove him in a police radio car to a marsh, stripped him of his footwear and shirt, kicked him, and then drove off. They claimed they returned to pick him up, but the boy was nowhere to be found.

He had to walk about a mile along railroad tracks to get assistance, finally reaching a shopping mall.

Danese and Elliassen were indicted for unlawful imprisonment and endangering the welfare of a minor, but pleaded out to disorderly conduct — a slap on the wrist — after Moreno refused to testify.

They were allowed to stay on the force, a fact that Moreno's lawyer, Brett Klein, criticized in response to the settlement agreement. "Mr. Moreno has agreed to this settlement to put this horrible incident behind him," Klein said, noting that the payments by the officers show "the seriousness of this police misconduct."

"New Yorkers should be alarmed that the two men who committed this crime against a 14-year-old still wear the NYPD shield."

A Patrolmen's Benevolent Association lawyer representing Danese and Elliassen had no immediate comment, and city lawyer Virginia Nimick said only that the "settlement was in the city's best interest."

Danese and Elliassen's commanding officer at the time of the incident, Inspector Richard Bruno, was also a defendant in the suit, but did not have to fork over any money under the settlement.

Since the incident, Moreno has been arrested at least eight times for a variety of crimes, including robbery, weapons possession and drugs.

In March, he was charged with shooting a man in the leg in Staten Island.